East of England Ambulance Service chief quits

The top man at the ambulance service in East Anglia has left, it emerged today.
QEH General Views of the outside of the hospital ANL-150525-110904009QEH General Views of the outside of the hospital ANL-150525-110904009
QEH General Views of the outside of the hospital ANL-150525-110904009

Dr Anthony Marsh had been the interim chief executive the East of England Ambulance Service since December 2013.

His appointment was controversial because he continued to remain the chief executive of the West Midlands Ambulance Service, combining both posts.

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That brought protests about his salary. Suffolk MP Dr Dan Poulter criticised Dr Marsh’s “obscenely high” £232,000 a year salary for running both trusts.

But last month more than 600 people signed a petition urging Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt to keep Dr Marsh in post, saying for him to leave would “clearly impact morale”.

A statement from the EEAST today said: “The Trust is in the process of recruiting a new chief executive. The final interviews have been completed and the Trust is in the process of agreeing final terms and arrangements for an appointment.

“We will make an announcement when this appointment can be confirmed, but the Trust is aiming to have the new CEO in post in August. Anthony Marsh officially returned to the West Midlands Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust on 5th August and in the short interim period our Deputy Chief Executive, Sandy Brown, will be covering the CEO role.”

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